All the Pretty Horses, best-selling novel by Cormac McCarthy, published in 1992 and made into a film in 2000.
Set in 1949, All the Pretty Horses, the first novel in Cormac McCarthy’s Border Trilogy, centers on John Grady Cole, a 16-year-old cowboy old enough to choose his way of life but too young to realize this choice in the face of familial and institutional resistance. When John’s mother sells the family ranch outside San Angelo, John and his best friend, 17-year-old Lacey Rawlins, leave for Mexico. Along the way, riding through vast oilfields and following the course of the Pecos River, they cross paths with a 13-year-old character named Jimmy Blevins—a meeting that will dramatically alter each of the boys’ lives in different ways.
Punctuated by McCarthy’s trademark violence and fatalistic worldview, the novel’s cultural landscape is in a state of transition, as the open Texan spaces are encroached upon by electric fences dividing land into smaller and smaller parcels. One feels that the homogeneity already colonizing the rest of the country waits just around the corner. At the outset of John and Lacey’s journey, Mexico plays a familiar part in this scenario: As the young men leave their home behind, they imagine a rugged land that will form a suitable backdrop to their nostalgic fantasies of cowboy life. When they become workers at a large hacienda in the state of Coahuila, however, they find themselves the subordinates of one of Mexico’s powerful elite. An island of opulence surrounded by back-breaking poverty, the hacienda does not protect John and Lacey from the intrigue resulting from their association with the criminally inclined Blevins, and John’s love for the hacendado’s daughter, 17-year-old Alejandra Villareal, leads to bloodshed.
McCarthy’s stately, winding prose, strongly influenced by William Faulkner, is at its best as he describes the lives of these young men out on the open range, where “they rode at once jaunty and circumspect, like thieves newly loosed in that dark electric, like young thieves in a glowing orchard, loosely jacketed against the cold and ten thousand worlds for the choosing.” The novel won the National Book Award in 1992.
In 1996, Columbia Pictures acquired film rights in the book and commissioned writer and actor Billy Bob Thornton to direct a film version. Matt Damon played the part of John Grady Cole, Henry Thomas that of Lacey Rawlins, and Penélope Cruz that of Alejandra Villareal. When Thornton delivered a film that ran for two hours and forty-two minutes, the studio edited it down to less than two hours. The film received largely negative reviews and recovered only a third of its reported $57 million budget.